Editorial Product Review: :Sibelius 5 music notation software helps teachers with preparing teaching materials and arrangements. It lets students hear how their work sounds, makes it easy to find and correct mistakes, and is much more fun to use than pen and paper! Sibelius 5 is suitable for all educational levels-it?s easy for beginners, yet sophisticated enough for all university requirements. At university level, Sibelius 5 software satisfies the most advanced requirements, from avant-garde and early music notation to Schenkerian analysis. ...
Editorial Product Review: :GarageBand Jam Pack: Symphony Orchestra lets you add the emotional stirrings of orchestral music to your own productions. Build orchestral themes using over 2000 prerecorded loops in different styles and tempos, including symphonic, chamber, and solo performances. You can also use loops individually to enhance songs in any style or genre. Enhance your song using a wide selection of pitched and unpitched percussion instruments including timpani, bells, gongs, celesta, xylophone, marimba, and more
Editorial Product Review: :Sibelius 5 is the essential software for writing, playing, printing, and publishing music notation. It will keep you inspired and help you take your ideas even further. Whatever your musical style, Sibelius 5 music notation software makes writing scores a breeze-giving you more time to focus on the music. Stunning features like Panorama mean you don't need to think about pages while you're composing or arranging. You can just let your creativity flow. Ideas Hub is a real ...
Editorial Product Review: :With Apple's GarageBand Jam Pack 3: Rhythm Section, you'll create beats that sound like they'll be international hits. Work with an impressive array of drum kits, percussion, basses, guitars, and other essential instruments. Build unique tracks with loops for rock, blues, jazz, and country songs. Fo undation elements include more than 1000 loops of drum beats and fills and 1000 more bass lines, guitar, and keyboard riffs and chord progressions. From modern rock beats to country shuffles to ...
Editorial Product Review: :Band-in-a-Box is an intelligent automatic accompaniment program, which means that you can go from nothing to complete song arrangements in as little as a few seconds. Simply enter chords to a song, choose a style of music, and Band-in-a-Box does the rest, generating a full band arrangement complete with Bass, Piano, Drums, Guitar, Strings, and more. You can arrange, listen to, or play along with songs in hundreds of musical styles. The MIDI and audio tracks that Band-in-a-Box ...
Editorial Product Review: :This library includes all the instruments of a symphony orchestra - strings, brass, woodwinds, and percussion - plus a Steinway concert grand piano, Stradivarius, Guarneri and Gagliano solo violins, Wurlitzer and Venus concert harps, Haynes flutes, Heckel bassoons, a Mustel celesta, a von Beckerath concert pipe organ, a harpsichord, and many more fine instruments. It even includes multiple solo instruments. Everything one needs to create orchestrations of any size! Build ensembles, one instrument at a time, from individual ...
Editorial Product Review: :Practica Musica 4.5 is a complete music education package for music theory and ear training! New dialog windows trace the entire history of music for the new student Compatible with Mac OS X
Editorial Product Review: :GarageBand Jam Pack: World Music lets you assemble intriguing musical compositions from 300 Apple Loops from nearly every corner of the globe. Rare and exotic instruments from Asia, Africa, the Middle East, India, Europe, the United Kingdom, South and Central America, Cuba and Jamaica are all at your fingertips. Over 3000 Apple Loops and 40 Software Instruments add exotic flavor to your GarageBand compositions, or add creative flair to projects in iMovie, iDVD and iPhoto. This is an ...
Editorial Product Review: :With G7, you can write tab, chords, lyrics, and notation, learn songs and riffs with the on-screen fretboard -- even publish your music on the Internet. You can play straight in from a MIDI keyboard or guitar, or write down the chords and create tab instantly. You can even scan in printed sheet music. G7 makes it easy to capture your ideas almost as fast as they come to you. To learn riffs, just scan in sheet music, ...
Editorial Product Review: :It's time to share the song in your head with the rest of the world. Sibelius First unleashes the songwriter in you - simply and easily. If you're more comfortable with a guitar or keyboard than the intricacies of musical notation, Sibelius First is for you. It's the easy way to create scores that you can print, share, post online, or even sell. Sibelius First features 'can't mess up' templates and plug-ins to help you create lead sheets, ...
We've covered in too much detail how it's some sort of "open season" on Vonage when it comes to VoIP patents. After dealing with ridiculous and expensive patent lawsuits from companies who failed to actually innovate in the same way Vonage did, the company was pressured by Wall Street to quickly settle the various patent lawsuits filed against the company. Of course, rather than settle matters, that simply opened the door for other companies to go searching through their patent portfolios to see if there was anything they could sue Vonage over. Indeed, following those settlements it didn't take long for AT&T to dig up a patent and sue -- which was quickly settled as well. Thought things were over? No such luck. Nortel just showed up last month to sue and it took all of about a week and a half for Vonage to settle that case as well.
The Nortel case is slightly different because Vonage actually already had a patent infringement lawsuit going against Nortel, but it wasn't really initiated by Vonage. Instead, it had been initiated by a patent holding firm that Vonage bought in 2006. The end result of the settlement doesn't involve money changing hands, but just a cross licensing agreement for the patents. So what's the big lesson that Vonage and others have learned from this? It's certainly got nothing to do with innovating. It's to hoard as many patents as possible so that you have your own nuclear stockpile for when someone else sues you. Want to know why the USPTO is overwhelmed? It's not because there aren't enough examiners (as some will claim) or that there aren't enough funds. It's because the way the system now works is that you are supposed to file patents on every tiny little advancement so you can use it to protect yourself against lawsuits from everyone else. That's not about innovation. It's about waste. In the meantime, since it's still open season at Vonage, who's going to be next? There are a ton of other patents in the VoIP space that can surely be used in a lawsuit, right?
Small and light enough for a shirt pocket, Samsung's Helix YX-M1 is a one-stop audio entertainment center with an XM radio, a digital music player, and room for 50 hours of tunes, but it comes up short on battery life.
This raw work-flow application isn't the Holy Grail many hoped it would be, but Apple Aperture 1.5 could make life easier for photographers who need to cull, retouch, and output large numbers of photographs quickly and efficiently.